Local man's company sees T-shirts worn globally, on TV and by sports teams
'I started out as an education major and then realized I didn't want to go to school for six years.' Joe Hoye, Life long Tees
Joe switched his focus to art and eventually to making T-shirts.
'I had a couple of friends who were really encouraging. One of them grew up here and played for the (Atlanta) Falcons and I started making shirts for the Falcons,' Hoye said. 'Just fun themes, shirts for their special teams or their defense. You know inside jokes that coaches were saying stuff like that. And it just kind of grew organically from there.'
Nightlight 614 announces 2025 summer movie lineup
It's those organic relationships that helped to propel Hoye's business through the pandemic. A life-changing opportunity presented itself when he rolled his T-shirt shuttle into yellow springs at the request of Dave Chappelle
'Dave was great, it was a big surprise,' Hoye said.
Originally hired to make shirts for Dave Chapelle's friends and family at his birthday party, Hoye ended up spending four months printing shirts at his shows in Yellow Springs.
'That was Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday and so I ended up calling some friends down and helped pull off the operation,' he said.
Live shows aren't the only places you'll see Hoye's designs. You can also catch them on shows like 'Always Sunny in Philadelphia.'
'I've counted over 50 shirts on Sunny alone and then there was some on 'Entourage'. They pop up all over the place.'
It's that relationship with 'Sunny' producer Megan Gantz and her husband Humphrey Ker from the show 'Welcome to Wrexham' that has Life Long Tees helping across the pond. Joining the fundraising efforts to support the Wrexham Miners Project in restoring a local recreation center which doubles as a rescue center for coal miners.
Early in-person, mail-in voting deadlines approach before Tuesday's Election Day
'I reached out and I had an idea to auction off some of the shirts worn on Sunny. And so to see one get auctioned off for $600 is crazy.'
Hoye is making an impact and leaving a legacy one T-shirt at a time.
This weekend the fundraising for the Wrexham Miners Project continues at Sweeney's Walnut Street Tavern. Saturday at 10 a.m. Sweeney's is hosting a Wrexham AFC watch party with Wrexham Lager on tap.
A portion of the proceeds will go to the Wrexham Miner's Project and Hoye will be there with limited edition Wrexham Sweeney's pop up tees. For more information visit https://www.lifelongtees.com/.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Wall Street Journal
a day ago
- Wall Street Journal
While Working on the Set of ‘Entourage,' She Came Up With an Idea for a Business
In 2009, Lauren Gropper was working as a sustainability consultant on the HBO series 'Entourage.' What she saw didn't seem very sustainable. Among other things, many sets built for the show were simply tossed in the dumpster after filming—a standard practice in Hollywood at the time, she says. Gropper's job was to evaluate how the 'Entourage' sets were designed and how they could be built to be disassembled and reused.
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
Rob McElhenney Addresses Name Change: 'Call Me Whatever You Want'
Rob McElhenney has seen the online discourse around his name change and is chiming in. The Emmy winner, who made headlines for filing to legally change his name to Rob Mac last week, took to social media to 'dedicate exactly one minute' to explaining why he took such significant measures. More from Deadline Rob McElhenney Files To Legally Change Name As Wrexham AFC Closes In On Premier League, FX Renews 'Welcome to Wrexham' For Season 5 Eva Longoria's 'Necaxa' Docuseries From 'Welcome To Wrexham' Team Gets Premiere Date At FXX 'Yes, I'm shortening my name to Rob Mac—mostly a stage name, but I digress,' he said in a video shared Tuesday on X. 'Is it kinda douchey? Sure, but the amount of time that I've wasted trying to get people to either say or spell my name correctly is literally days of my life. Trust me, I added it up.' Although he wants 'to stay connected' to the family name, he noted 'it's not even really our f—ing name,' explaining, 'Not only have many generations changed the spelling. The current one was just given to my ancestor by a government official who decided that this was now the spelling.' 'It was a crazy time. But times have changed, and most people already call me Rob Mac anyway,' he continued. 'My family knows me and loves me regardless of how many syllables I have, and that's the only thing that I really care about.' I said what I said. — Rob McElhenney (@RMcElhenney) July 1, 2025 With a nod to other actors who have changed their names, Mac concluded, 'There are so many things going on in the world, and this is a silly one to continue to waste your time with. Honestly, call me whatever you want.' It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia fans can expect to see the co-creator and star's new credit when Season 17 premieres July 9 on FXX with 'The Gang F***s Up Abbott Elementary', the second half of the show's two-part crossover event with ABC's Abbott Elementary. Best of Deadline 'The Buccaneers' Season 2 Soundtrack: From Griff To Sabrina Carpenter 'The Buccaneers' Season 2 Release Schedule: When Do New Episodes Come Out? 'The Gilded Age' Season 3 Release Schedule: When Do New Episodes Come Out?
Yahoo
3 days ago
- Yahoo
Why Rob McElhenney and the ‘It's Always Sunny' gang didn't want Danny DeVito to join the record-setting sitcom (exclusive book excerpt)
It's safe to say it wasn't always sunny behind the scenes of a certain beloved sitcom. In her new book, It's (Almost) Always Sunny in Philadelphia: How Three Friends Spent $200 to Create the Longest-Running Live-Action Sitcom in History and Help Build a Network, Gold Derby contributor Kim Potts traces the strange but true history of the show as it prepares to celebrate its 20th anniversary. More from Gold Derby As 'The Bear' gets picked up for another season, it sinks to 4th place in our Emmy predictions: Behind the free fall Everything to know about 'The Devil Wears Prada' sequel as filming begins: Who's coming back, who's out, and who's new The brainchild of Rob McElhenney, Charlie Day, and Glenn Howerton (collectively known as RCG), It's Always Sunny, which premiered on FX on Aug. 4, 2005, introduced "The Gang," a gaggle of self-centered miscreants running a South Philly dive bar. Potts recounts the low-budget origins of the show, how RCG joined together to craft the pilot and assemble the team, and, in the exclusive excerpt below, how its most famous cast member, Danny DeVito, wasn't quite welcomed with open arms when he joined in the second season. Potts sets up the tale. *** In this excerpt, I write about the role then-president of FX (now chairman of FX Networks) John Landgraf played in bringing Danny DeVito to It's Always Sunny. Landgraf, affectionately known as 'the Mayor of Television' in entertainment media circles, believed DeVito's comedy track record and personal sense of humor made him the perfect A-list candidate to help bolster attention for the then-struggling, low-budget It's Always Sunny. When he pitched the idea to RCG, the response he received left him more than a little surprised. An ultimatum, it seemed, was in order… When Landgraf was hired as the president of entertainment at FX in 2004, The Shield, the network's first breakout series, was already a hit. Michael Chiklis had already won a Best Actor Emmy and a Golden Globe Award for the gritty cop drama's first season. The Shield premiered in 2002 with close to 5 million viewers, and for all of Season 2, it dipped below 3 million just a couple of times. By Season 3, Landgraf 's first at the network, The Shield managed to reach 3 million viewers only once out of 15 episodes. But Landgraf didn't panic. He planned. His solution to the ratings spill: injecting some new blood into the Strike Team, the largely rogue and corrupt Los Angeles police division the series revolved around. But not just anyone would do — Landgraf envisioned A-list talent. At the top of his wish list: Emmy winner and, by then, five-time Oscar nominee Glenn Close. FX was specifically concerned with the dwindling numbers for The Shield's female viewership, and Landgraf and his team were certain Close could help bring them back. Not really expecting her to be interested in a lead role on a basic-cable television series, Landgraf 's office nevertheless reached out to her representatives, who thought it was an interesting idea. So Landgraf, Fox entertainment chairman Peter Liguori, and The Shield creator Shawn Ryan flew to New York, where they spent three hours at Close's Charles Street condo in the West Village, pitching her a lead role on the drama. 'She is as challenging and inspiring as you would expect, peppering us with questions,' Liguori said of the meeting. By the time the trio landed back in L.A., they had gotten the news that Glenn Close was ready to sign on to play new precinct captain Monica Rawling. Her one year on the series earned her lead actress Emmy and Golden Globe nominations and increased the Season 4 ratings by 21 percent over the previous year's numbers. Which got Landgraf thinking... why wouldn't that work for It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia? Sure, it was a comedy, not one of FX's signature dramas. And Sunny was still a new show, with seven episodes in total to its name, while The Shield had 39 episodes for viewers to get to know the characters and actors who portrayed them. Still, Landgraf had the perfect A-lister in mind to add to The Gang, and unlike the blind shot he took with The Shield, his potential new Sunny star was already a close personal friend and former professional partner. *** Landgraf's last job before joining FX was as a founding partner of Jersey Television, the production company behind, most notably, Reno 911!, the mockumentary-style spoof of Cops. The series, which initially ran on Comedy Central for six seasons, revolved around the outrageous, hapless officers of the sheriff 's department in Reno, Nevada, and the equally outrageous, hapless characters they ran into on the job. One Season 2 episode, called 'Not Without My Mustache,' included two sheriffs helping a teenager lose his virginity with a prostitute, a pair of incestuous siblings trying to dry hump in the back of a sheriff 's car, and another sheriff losing a testicle, as had been predicted by a psychic the day before. Reno 911! was created by Thomas Lennon, Robert Ben Garant, and Kerri Kenney (now Kenney-Silver). Its cast was a who's who of some of the best comedy actors working on TV, including the creators, Niecy Nash (now Niecy Nash-Betts), Cedric Yarbrough, Wendi McLendon-Covey, and Carlos Alazraqui, with a deep bench of guest stars rivaling several iterations of Saturday Night Live casts. Landgraf was an executive producer on Reno 911!, and therein lies a possible hint as to why he found It's Always Sunny so appealing from the first time he saw the DIY pilot. Just as McElhenney has often said a major motivation for creating Sunny was 'desperation,' as it was a way for him, Day, and Howerton to create work for themselves, Thomas Lennon and company were similarly driven. When a pilot Lennon, Kenney-Silver, and Garant wrote for Fox was canceled as it was about to be filmed, they asked network execs if they could apply the unused portion of the budget to make a pilot for a new series, which became Reno 911! Fox passed on it, too, and it would be two more years be- fore Comedy Central premiered it, in 2003. There is a commonality between the Sunny and Reno creators, of comedy sensibilities and of being proactive and making their own creative opportunities. Other commonalities between Sunny and Reno 911!: the incestuous brother and sister in 'Not Without My Mustache' were played by Day and Ellis, before Sunny, and before they were married in real life. And Landgraf was a cofounder of Jersey Television with his good friend Danny DeVito, the A-lister he thought would make a great addition to the second season of It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia. *** Landgraf knew the outrageous, taboo-poking comedy was right in line with DeVito's own comedy tastes and personal sense of humor, and he was just as confident that McElhenney, Day, and Howerton could write a character that DeVito would find worthy of his time and talents. Landgraf sent DeVito the Season 1 episodes and wasn't totally surprised to find his friend had already seen them. His kids with his wife, Rhea Perlman — Lucy, Grace, and Jake — were big fans and had turned their father on to the series. DeVito was interested in knowing more. Landgraf's next step, a pro forma one he was sure, was to share his idea with RCG. Their reception to adding DeVito to the mix was... unexpected. They said no. Not because they had any doubt about DeVito's talent, obviously. McElhenney in particular was a devoted TV junkie throughout his childhood. He was especially a fan of classic comedies like Family Ties, Cheers, and Taxi. One of the greatest sitcom moments ever, he believed, was from the Taxi pilot, 'Like Father, Like Daughter.' DeVito's character, Louie De Palma, a dispatcher and supervisor for the Sunshine Cab Company, was arguing with his employees when he stepped from the caged office he worked in, revealing to the audience that this belligerent, aggressive man was a foot shorter than the five people standing in front of him. DeVito had built up such a body of work on television (his Emmy- and Golden Globe-winning performance on Taxi), in movies (One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, Golden Globe–nominated Ruthless People, and Matilda), as a producer (Oscar winners Pulp Fiction and Erin Brockovich), and as a director (The War of the Roses and Throw Momma from the Train) that he had earned a status as nothing less than a Hollywood legend. In spite of all that, and somewhat because of it, McElhenney, Day, and Howerton told their boss that they were not interested in adding DeVito to their show. They knew his work but not his personality or his work habits. What if he came in and threw his experience, his accolades, and his connection to Landgraf around the set? What if he joined the cast and tried to interfere with the creative authority they'd established and sacrificed for? What if he came in and disrupted the chemistry that RCG and Olson had built so quickly during their brief first season? That was just too big of a risk to take. FX executives had shown themselves to be pleased enough with Season 1, and optimistic about the prospects for Season 2, so as the executive producers saw the situation, it was best to leave the cast the way it was. In that case, Landgraf told them, he was no longer interested in airing their series on his network. Umm, wait…, they replied. So when can we meet with Danny DeVito? Season 17 of It's Always Sunny premieres July 9 on FXX and streams July 10 on Hulu. It's (Almost) Always Sunny in Philadelphia by Kim Potts is now available at major booksellers. Best of Gold Derby Cristin Milioti, Amanda Seyfried, Michelle Williams, and the best of our Emmy Limited Series/Movie Actress interviews Paul Giamatti, Stephen Graham, Cooper Koch, and the best of our Emmy Limited Series/Movie Actor interviews Lee Jung-jae, Adam Scott, Noah Wyle, and the best of our Emmy Drama Actor interviews Click here to read the full article.